This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Informa PLC and all copyright resides with them. Informa PLC's registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. Number 8860726.

Private label booming as recession bites

New data from the US shows that private label grocery products are emerging from the shadows to become the star of the economic downturn.

Nielsen figures produced for the Private Label Manufacturers Association (PLMA) show that in the year to 29 November 2008, value sales of US private label products across all channels rose 9.7% to $53.6 billion. Sector growth significantly outstripped total market growth, which stood at 3.2% over the same period, and trounced branded sales, which rose just 1.8%.

With the market worth a total of $294.4 billion, private label's share of US grocery is still a relatively modest 18.2%, up from 17.1% a year earlier. But it means there is plenty of room, and potential, for private label to grow. And the indications are that this is what we will see happen.

An attitudinal survey undertaken recently by GfK, again for the PLMA, found that 31% of respondents were buying more store brand products than a year ago. In addition, the percentage of consumers who said they bought private label 'frequently' had increased sharply to 55% from 41% in 2006 and 12% back in 1991.

All these figures suggest the US is heading in the same direction as Europe, where private label products already represent a far greater proportion of grocery sales. PLMA figures from 2007 show that in the UK private label sales represented 39.3% of all grocery sales by value. In Germany the figure was 30.8% and in France 25.2%. More up-to-date figures for the UK, from TNS Worldpanel, put private label market share as high as 50.7% by value in the year to 22 February 2009.

But what does this all mean for functional foods and dietary supplements? It's hard to say for sure. Own label functional food sales are not measured by the PLMA and the most recent available data for the supplements sector is for 2007 — before the recession took bite.

These figures show that private label products had 25.1% of the US supplements category in 2007, by dollar value, and that this market share was down 1.1% on 2006 levels.

In the UK, the PLMA data for 2007 indicates supplements had 38.2% of the market compared with 36.3% in 2006. The more recent TNS figures , however, show supplements had 53.7% of the UK market, but that sales were down 1.25%.

In terms of functional foods, the TNS figures show that sales of UK private label yoghurt drinks — which includes active health drinks such as the probiotic Actimel and Yakult, and the cholesterol-lowering Benecol and Flora Pro-Activ — rose 10.2%. The market rose just 1.1%; brands by a paltry 0.24%. However, own label products in this category still command only 9.4% of the total market, which means the market remains overwhelmingly dominated by brands.

It's far from clear-cut and, in fact, the world's leading authority on private label, PLMA president Brian Sharoff, believes products containing functional ingredients will not be a primary target for retailers' private label during the recession, arguing that their focus lies elsewhere.

"Some retailers are attempting to maintain their customer loyalty by competing with the discounters, who they are afraid might be taking business away from them during recessionary times," he says. "This is a separate strategy and does not take anything away from the value-added brands."